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  1. Luther Lee Bernard (October 29, 1881 – January 23, 1951) was an American sociologist and psychologist. He was the 22nd President of the American Sociological Association (for the year 1932). [1] [2] He has been described as "among the best known U.S. sociologist in the country... between the 1920 and the 1940,".

  2. Luther Lee Bernard. October 29, 1881 – January 23, 1951. Luther L. Bernard served as the 22nd President of the American Sociological Society. His Presidential Address entitled “Sociological Research and the Exceptional Man” was delivered at the organization’s annual meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio in December 1932 and was later published in ...

  3. En efecto, la expresión fue utilizada por primera vez, según nos consta, por Luther Lee Bernard en un trabajo de 1930 que pasaba revista de las escuelas del pensamiento social, desde la filosofía de la antigua Grecia hasta la “sociología de Chicago”.

  4. www.encyclopedia.com › applied-and-social-sciences-magazines › bernard-l-lBernard, L. L. | Encyclopedia.com

    Applied and social sciences magazines. Bernard, L. L. views 1,332,323 updated. Bernard, L. L. WORKS BY BERNARD. Luther Lee Bernard (18811951), one of the most versatile and erudite American sociologists of the first half of the twentieth century, was born in a rich agricultural area of eastern Kentucky.

  5. The sociologist Luther Lee Bernard (29 Oct. 1881-23 Jan. 1951) was born in Russell County, Kentucky to the farmer Hiram H. Bernard and his wife Julia Wilson. Hiram H. Bernard, a former Union solider treated Luther tyrannically and that led to a bitter and antagonistic relationship between them.

  6. Sociological Research and the Exceptional Man Luther Lee Bernard Washington University. ABSTRACT. The present dominant interest among sociologists is research, but there is lacking an adequate agreement as to what constitutes research and as to the methods to be employed in the prosecution of research; also the methods of selecting research projects in sociology and investigators are still ...

  7. The psychoanalysts have approached the question of instincts, in so far as they have considered it philosophically at all, from a metaphysical rather than from a scientific standpoint. They are dealing in abstract social and personal values instead of in neural stimulus-response processes, end organs and effectors.